`Clone Wars’ revives old-style `Star Wars’ fun

A tinge of Anakin Skywalker’s coming dark side clearly is visible in “Star Wars: The Clone Wars.” Yet the animated adventure mostly harks back to the fun, swashbuckling times of the original “Star Wars” trilogy.

Lucasfilm Animation, which screened the movie Tuesday for The Associated Press in advance of its Aug. 15 theatrical release, has crafted a movie nicely tucked in to Anakin’s early heroic days, before his transformation into the evil Darth Vader.

Along for the ride are noble-hearted clone soldiers with the camaraderie of Marine grunts, inept android warriors as idiotic as the Three Stooges and a young protege who rivals Anakin for cockiness and affectionately calls him “Sky Guy.”

Dave Filoni, director of the movie and supervising director for “The Clone Wars” animated TV show debuting this fall on TNT and the Cartoon Network, said the idea was to return to the wisecracking tone of the original “Star Wars” in 1977, before the gloom of Anakin’s fall.

“I wanted this to have the banter. I wanted this to be funny,” Filoni said in an interview at Skywalker Ranch, home to Lucasfilm Animation, a division of “Star Wars” creator George Lucas’ filmmaking empire. “Telling that dark story of Anakin Skywalker was important for George, but this was a chance to show Anakin before that. Anakin as a hero, Anakin as the good guy, Anakin more like his son,” Luke Skywalker, of the original trilogy.

The Anakin in “Clone Wars” is a hybrid of Luke and his rascally ally, Han Solo, Filoni said.

“He’s cocky like Han, he can do a lot of things like Han, he’s clever with machines like Han. But he’s naive like Luke. The whole galaxy is a bit overwhelming,” Filoni said.

Characters not seen in the live-action movies include conniving assassin Asajj Ventress; Jabba’s sinister uncle, a giant slug that speaks with a Truman Capote-like Southern drawl; and Captain Rex, a loyal member of Anakin’s clone crew.

The main newcomer is Ahsoka Tano, a teenage girl from an exotic alien species who’s assigned as Anakin’s Jedi apprentice. With mischievous wit, Ahsoka breaks down Anakin’s stiff facade and reluctance to take on a student, the two establishing a flippant rapport as they slice up droids with their light-sabers, scale a daunting summit on a rescue mission and play nursemaid to Jabba’s kidnapped baby son.

“She definitely brings a fun side out of Anakin. I think they have such a great relationship,” said Ashley Eckstein, who provides Ahsoka’s voice. “Ahsoka is very eager to prove herself, and I don’t think she would allow Anakin not to accept her.”

The movie offers a glimpse of the inner turmoil that contributes to Anakin’s turn to the dark side. Crash-landing on his home planet of Tatooine, Anakin momentarily bears a haunted look as he’s asked about the desert world, where he exacted a savage revenge over the death of his mother in “Attack of the Clones.”

“I was hoping I’d never have to lay eyes on this dustball again,” Anakin says.

Opening with a variation on John Williams’ familiar “Star Wars” theme, the movie is heavy on humor. Anakin devises an amusing low-tech way for him and Ahsoka to sneak inside a droid energy shield. Obi-Wan engages in a witty surrender negotiation with a general who speaks in a Sean Connery brogue. When a droid falls off a cliff and smashes on the ground, his superior leans over and barks, “Get back here, sergeant.”

A few veteran “Star Wars” performers provide voices for the movie, including Samuel L. Jackson as Mace, Christopher Lee as Dooku and Anthony Daniels as C-3PO. Taking over from Hayden Christensen as the voice of Anakin is Matt Lanter, while James Arnold Taylor does Obi-Wan, who was played by Ewan McGregor in the prequel trilogy.

Anakin remains a bit rash, but he has graduated from apprenticeship to Obi-Wan to take the lead on his own missions as an equal to his former master.

“With this movie and also the ongoing series, we’re going to see the banter between Obi-Wan and Anakin. We’re going to see them as comrades, as buddies,” Lanter said. “It is reminiscent of some of the original `Star Wars.’ It’s got that comic relief in it and has kind of that old-school feeling.”

Mentioned briefly in the first “Star Wars,” the Clone Wars are depicted fleetingly in “Attack of the Clones” and “Revenge of the Sith,” the second and third episodes in the prequel trilogy.

The new movie and the TV show take place in the three years between those films, as the Jedi lead the galactic republic’s clone army against the robot forces of a separatist movement headed by Dooku.

It was a murky epoch in the “Star Wars” universe, ripe with stories about Anakin and other central figures but also minor characters and new ones never seen before.

“That was the impetus of that, this whole period of time we could run around in,”

Lucas said in an interview earlier this year.

Lucas initially planned just a TV show. But as he viewed the first footage, “he said, `This looks great. The fans should really see this on the big screen,'” said Filoni, who came to “Clone Wars” after working on the animated series “Avatar: The Last Airbender.”

Filoni and his collaborators reshaped a story arc developed for the series into a stand-alone tale they could tell as a theatrical movie.

The computer animation borrows from the striking panoramas of Japanese anime, while the characters have a chiseled look and movements vaguely reminiscent of the 1960s puppet adventure series “Thunderbirds.”

Though animated, the world is recognizably “Star Wars,” from Yoda’s twitching frowns to the hum of the light-sabers.

“A lot of people have said to me that have seen it well, the few people that have seen it at this point that they feel like they’re watching `Star Wars,'” Filoni said. “They feel like they’re seeing those characters again. Even though we’ve done this style that’s painterly, if you want to call it that, it’s still `Star Wars.'”
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